IE gains further on Netscape

A study by IDC which analyzed the installed base of Web browsers throughthe end of 1997 shows that Microsoft's Internet Explorer is gaining furtheron market leader Netscape. According to the study, marketshare for NetscapeNavigator fell from 54.6%

Paul Thurrott

June 28, 1998

1 Min Read
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A study by IDC which analyzed the installed base of Web browsers throughthe end of 1997 shows that Microsoft's Internet Explorer is gaining furtheron market leader Netscape. According to the study, marketshare for NetscapeNavigator fell from 54.6% in 1996 to 50.5%. Microsoft's share rose in thesame time period from 16.4% to 22.8%. In third place is America Online'sbrowser, which rose from 13.1% to 16.1%. Since America Online now uses IEas its default browser, most of those users will probably be attributed toInternet Explorer this year.

"Although Netscape only made gains in the small business segment, the company was still able to maintain its number one position in 1997," saidJoan-Carol Brigham, an IDC analyst. "However, Microsoft--which increasedits market share in all segments--was able to achieve a high rate of new user adoptions and upgrades. This was accomplished by landmark efforts tomarket version 4.0 of Internet Explorer, which kept recognition high throughout 1997, and by shipping the product toward the end of the year."

Microsoft's biggest gains were in the home and government markets, IDC said. Meanwhile, Netscape owns a commanding 75% of the educational market.

Since the survey was completed, Netscape has changed the way they dobusiness in several dramatic ways: They stopping charging for their browserand began giving away the source code. Netscape has also turned to theirWeb site as a major source of revenue. IDC's survey of the first half of1998, will better reflect the current browser market, which includes theimpact of a free Netscape (arguably, not many people were paying for itanyway) and the maturation of Internet Explorer 4.0, which has almostuniversally been reviewed as superior to Netscape's browser.

For more information about the survey, please visit the IDC Web site

About the Author

Paul Thurrott

Paul Thurrott is senior technical analyst for Windows IT Pro. He writes the SuperSite for Windows, a weekly editorial for Windows IT Pro UPDATE, and a daily Windows news and information newsletter called WinInfo Daily UPDATE.

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